Aviation: Night Flying

Baroness Kramer: My Honourable Friend, the Parliamentary Under Secretary of State for Transport (Robert Goodwill) has made the following Ministerial Statement:
	The Government announced on 26 March 2012 an extension of the restrictions on night flying at Heathrow, Gatwick and Stansted Airports for a period of two years until October 2014.
	Our subsequent first stage consultation closed on 22 April 2013 and gathered evidence on options for the next regime. We are grateful to all who took the time to respond to this.
	I am announcing today the publication of a second consultation which sets out our proposals for the next regime.
	Many of the respondents to the stage one consultation suggested that we should take account of the findings of the Airports Commission before making any changes to the night restrictions regime. The Commission’s final report is due to be published in summer 2015, preceded by an interim report at the end of this year.
	As noise impacts are a key consideration for the Commission, we agree that it would not be sensible to make any significant changes to the current regime before the Commission has completed its work and the Government has had time to consider its recommendations. We therefore propose to set a three year regime to last until October 2017 which will retain the main features of the current regime, in particular the numbers of movements and noise quota permitted.
	I will place a copy of the consultation in the libraries of both Houses.

Research Council UK

Viscount Younger of Leckie: My Rt. Hon Friend the Minister of State for Universities and Science (David Willetts) has made the following statement.
	Research Councils UK has today published management data on how spend has been allocated across the nations of the United Kingdom from 2005-06 to 2012-13. This data has informed the Scottish Analysis Programme paper on research also published today and does not relate to the Research Councils’ financial reports already audited and laid before Parliament. Data before 2010-11 has been re-stated from previously published figures for consistency and is based on a harmonisation of management accounting practice across the seven UK Research Councils. As a result
	newly-published historic data may not be identical to that used in previous statements and Parliamentary Questions.
	A copy of the spend data and explanatory notes will be placed in the Libraries of both Houses and will be available at: www.rcuk.ac.uk/ukfunding.

Violence Against Women and Girls Overseas

Baroness Northover: My Hon Friend the Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for International Development has made the following statement.
	I am pleased to take this opportunity to update the House on my role as Ministerial Champion for Tackling Violence against Women and Girls Overseas.
	Violence against women and girls is a global pandemic—it is one of the most systematic, widespread human rights abuses in the world. The UK Government believes this can change, that every woman and girl has the right to live free from violence and abuse.
	The establishment of the role of Ministerial Champion for Tackling Violence against Women and Girls Overseas is the first of its kind internationally. I was appointed to this role by the Prime Minister in 2010 and for the last three years I have had the privilege of being at the forefront of UK efforts to successfully drive forward progress towards eliminating violence against women and girls internationally.
	In my role I am also working to improve policy coherence across UK Government Departments, ensuring that what we do has the greatest possible impact overseas. I have also championed this issue with the media, civil society and with parliamentarians in the countries in which we work. As a result we are now seeing an unprecedented level of commitment to this issue that I would like to bring to the House’s attention.
	As Champion, I am passionately committed to tackle all forms of violence against women and girls but have identified three priority areas:
	• Addressing violence against women and girls in humanitarian emergencies – because women and girls are often the most vulnerable in emergencies and in times of conflict; • Ending female genital mutilation/cutting—as this is one the worst kinds of gender violence, where girls around the world have suffered a lifetime of damage, sometimes even death, as a result; • Building the evidence base—so we better understand what works in preventing violence against women and girls.
	During my time as champion, the UK government has shown considerable leadership in this area at all levels. This includes the recognition of violence against women and girls in the Prime Minister’s ‘Golden Thread’ agenda for International Development and his push for its inclusion in the framework that will replace the Millennium Development Goals; the Foreign Secretary’s commitment to addressing sexual violence in conflict through the Preventing Sexual Violence Initiative; and DFID’s scaling up of its response to
	violence against women and girls, including more in-country programmes on preventing violence, support to building the evidence-base on prevention including launching a £25M research programme, and high-level leadership on addressing violence against women and girls in humanitarian responses.
	I am championing our work on female genital mutilation/cutting (FGM/C), of which I am very proud—demonstrating UK leadership in backing an Africa-led movement on this issue. In March 2013 I announced DFID’s flagship £35 million programme which will help to end this practice within a generation with a specific objective of reducing it by 30% in at least 10 countries in 5 years. There are clearly links between the diaspora and what is happening within their countries of origin. Within our FGM/C programme, we will be working with diaspora communities with the specific aim of supporting ways for them to influence change in their countries of origin.
	Important steps have also been taken this year at the international policy level in which the UK has played a key role. This includes the agreed conclusions reached at the 2013 UN Commission on the Status of Women which gives the international community a strong mandate to take a stand on ending violence against women and girls.
	We have also seen the Foreign Secretary deliver the Preventing Sexual Violence Initiative, ensuring our efforts across government are fully complementary. So far, the initiative led to the historic G8 Declaration,
	and in September 2013 the ambitious Declaration of Commitment to End Sexual Violence in Conflict which, so far, 134 countries have endorsed.
	Looking forward, building on the G8 commitments, on 13th November 2013, the Secretary of State for International Development will host a High Level Call to Action on Protecting Girls and Women in Emergencies, to be held in London. This event will shine a spotlight on the actions the international community will take to better protect women and girls in emergencies.
	We are also developing a new UK National Action Plan on Women, Peace and Security, to be launched in March 2014. This will ensure that the UK’s work in conflict resolution and peace-building takes into account the impact of conflict on women as well as the important role they play in building a lasting peace.
	Alongside the International Development Secretary, I will continue to push for the inclusion of a stand-alone goal on gender equality, which includes a target on ending violence against women and girls, in the framework that will replace the Millennium Development Goals after 2015.
	As recommended by the International Development Committee in their recent report on violence against women and girls, I am working to ensure that we continue to scale up the development and implementation of programmes to tackle violence against women and girls in all DfID priority countries.